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Library of
The University of North Carolina
COLLECTION OF
NORTH CAROLINIANA
ENDOWED BY
JOHN SPRUNT HILL
of the Class of 1889
C3l^^„
[jlZr
v.H
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This book must not be
taken from the Library
building.
i 9Jaf25
• 291,23
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ImrvoT'J.it'r Libr".ryi, .
VOLUME XI, No. 8
MAY, 1923
Alumni Review
The University of North Carohna
PERSPECTIVK OF 1 HE^NKVV CHAPEI. HIIJ.
EPISCOPAL CHURCH
GENERAL DIRECTORY OF ALUMNI OFFICERS
HEARD AND SEEN AROUND THE WELL
TRUSTEES ADOPT BUILDING PROGRAM FOR 1923-25
BASEBALL RESULTS AND PROSPECTS
Mr. Daniel Webster's Hat
Daniel Webster's famous retort to a smart young man when their
hats got exchanged: "Why, Mr. Webster, our heads are the same
size," said the smart young man. "Perhaps so on the outside." replied
Mr. Webster.
We make the application to our quality lines of school equipment,
not the sise but quality in the make-up — ''inside stuff."
We have furnished large quantity of equipment for the lecture
rooms in the new buildings at the University during the past year.
We also furnished the State College for Women at Greensboro
and the State College for Men at Raleigh and practically every pro-
gressive city and county system in the State.
We made shipments into twelve States.
We are in position to meet your requirements whatever they may
be in quality, styles, prices and service.
Southern School Supply Company
Raleigh, North Carolina
American Tubular
Steel Desks
High Grade Steel Frame Desks
of Different Styles used in the Best
Schools. Stock of Combination
Desks carried in Charlotte Ware-
house for immediate delivery.
Full Line of Auditorium Chairs
and other School Furniture.
Samples and Prices submitted on
Request.
American Tubular Steel Combination Desk
Blackboards, Crayon, Erasers, Globes, Etc.,
also carried in stock
Write for catalogue
^^ !• Ol 1C 1 i^ ^^^ Brevard Court
Carolina ocnool oupply v^o. charlotte, n. c
O^iviy^ourikfireei east ai %rkAvenue
QXcuf'Vdrdeitif
AN HOTEL OF DISTINCTION
WlIH MODERATE TARIFF
WALTON H. MARSHALL
Manager
The Bon Air-Vanderbilt
Augusta, Georgia
Two picturesque golf courses.
Tennis. Horseback riding.
Motoring. 300 rooms, each
with bath. Management un-
der the direction of the Van-
derbilt Hotel, New York.
Murphy's Hotel
Richmond, Virginia
CrfiE most modern, largest
and best located Hotel in
'^chmond, being on direct
car line to all %tilroad
T>epots.
The only Hotel in the city
•with a garage attached
Headquarters for Carolina
Business Men
JAMES T. DISNEY, President
OPERATED ON EUROPEAN
PLAN
The Trust Department
OF THE
First National Trust Company
OF Durham, North Carolina
o
FFERS safety and service in handling
of estates and trust funds and acts as
executor, administrator, trustee, guard-
ian and receiver.
FIRST NATIONAL TRUST CO.
JAS. 0. COBB, President JULIAN S. CARR, Vice-President
W. J. HOLLOWAY, Vice-President J. F. GLASS, Treasurer
C. M. CARR, Chairman, Board of Directors
WHY NOT MAKE YOUR CONTRIBUTION TO
THE ALUMNI LOYALTY FUND
By means of an Endowment Insurance Policy? The volume
of "bequest insurance" is growing by leaps and bounds. It's
the safest and surest way of making a bequest. Policies from
$250 to $50,000 may be had in the
Southern Life and Trust Company
HOME OFFICE "The Multiple Line Company" GREENSBORO, N. C.
CAPITAL $1,000,000.00
A. W. McAlister, President A. M. Scales, Second VicePresident
R. G. Vaughn, First Vice-President H. B. Gunter, Third Vice-President
Arthur Watt, Secretary
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
Volume XI
MAY, 1923
Number 8
OPINION AND COMMENT
Building Program Adopted
Meetint? with tlie Executive Committee in Chapel
Hill on April 19, the Building Committee of the Uni-
versity laid out a program of construction for the
biennium covering nineteen undertakings and call-
ing for the expenditure of the $1,650,000 provided
by the recent legislature.
Among the more notable jn-ovisions which alumni
will heartily approA-e. are : $400,000 for a new chem-
ical laboratory. $100,000 for a woman's dormitory:
$90,000 for the extension of athletic grounds and the
erection of a building to take care of indoor athletics ;
$375,000 for three new dormitories; $125,000 for
renovating the old dormitories, and amounts suf-
ficient to insure the development of a new water
supply and the extension of the sewer system.
Altogether, the program is a most admirable one,
and, now that it has been adopted, it becomes the
privilege of the University to see that it is carried
out in a way that will add to the efficiency and perma-
nent attractiveness of the campus.
n D n
Who Are Responsible for Alumni Leadership?
On another page appears a directory of the officers
and committees of the General Alumni Association,
class secretaries, and officers of local associations.
The Rea'iew publishes the list for a very definite
purpose. It wishes to bring home to the officers the
fact that they, .just as the Trustees, or Faculty, or
.student body, represent a fourth member of the Uni-
versity of Xorth Carolina — the big member, in fact.
in keeping the University before the public and as-
sisting it in securing the sort of support necessary
for it to do the great work which it should in the
State and nation. It also wishes to let the alumni as
a whole know who its leaders are and who are respon-
sible for the success or failure of the alumni program.
n n n
The Central Office Does Its Part
With this done. The Review wishes to say some-
thing about the work of the central office of the Gen-
eral Association. Secretary Grant took the duties of
the office over in the fall of 1922. Since then some-
thing for the good of the Association has been done
everj^ moment. It may not be apparent to the alumni
as a group, but the fundamental work of establish-
ing an office, of securing the pro])er addresses of
alumni, of perfecting a mailing room eqiiipment. of
visiting alumni groups in different sections of the
country, and of devising wa.\s and means of putting
ginger into the alumni organization — this necessary
work has been pushed with the finest sort of results.
With this accomplished, or being accomplished,
the time has come for the alumni to catch their
stride in making the University a great, outstanding
institution.
nan
The Door of Opportunity Swings Wide
The University of North Carolina has the oppor-
tunity of becoming one of the great institutions of
the nation. It has a notable history for a century and
a quarter. Its faculty numbers well up toward 200
and contains many men of the highest scholarly at-
tainment. Its record for scholarly investigation is
imsurpassed by that of any institution in the South.
Its library now numbers 115,000 volumes and adds
more than 10,000 volumes annually. Its journals,
such as The Journal of the ElisJia Mitchell Scientific
Society, Studies in Philology, and The Journal of
Social Forces, to mention only three of the nine it
publishes, are held in highest esteem throughout the
scholarly world.
Again, we say, there is a program for the alumni
here commensurate with that of Yale, or Princeton,
or Michigan, or California. It is not concerned merely
with athletics, or increasing the number of students,
or assisting in increasing its appropriations, essential
as these may be. But it does call for the most care-
ful sort of study of the part alumni should play in
building the greater University and in interpreting it
to the people — a task of mammoth proportions, tre-
mendously worth the doing, and. as yet, scarcely con-
ceived of, much less begun !
The Review doesn't know just what program the
officers of the Association will present at the ap-
proaching meeting on Alumni Day. It is inevitable
that The Graham Memorial Building. The Alumni
Loyalty Fund, Carolina Inn, and various other splen-
did undertakings will be up for consideration. But
along with them there should go the consideration of
this fact which we have touched on in the barest out-
line — this fact that the door of opportunity swings
wide of making this the great University of the South,
and that it is the privilege of this alumni group to
start to do it now!
n n D
Floridians Set an Example
Secretary Grant has recently returned from a most
enthusiastic meeting of Carolina alumni in Florida.
The activities of the alumni group in that state so
impressed him that he sent The Review the follow-
ing comment concerning it :
The Central Office finds in the aggressive assistance
rendered by Univcrsitj' alumni in Florida a model
sort of attitude and contribution. It answers perma-
210
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
nently the argument of the "doubting Thomas" that
"we're too far away," or "we're too scattered," or
"we're too busy." Of course these are not argu-
ments, but mere excmses to cover indifference or
waning interest.
The University has slightly over 100 alumni in the
entire state, of whom only about 60 could, until re-
cently, be reached with recorded addresses. Florida,
let it be remembered, is not a compact state, and these
]00-plus alumni are scattered from Pensacola to
Jacksonville to Key "West. Jacksonville has the
largest number of any one city, claiming about fifteen.
These handicaps were no deterrent for the unflag-
ging enthusiasfli of the men who took up the work,
and after much planning a well-attended meeting was
held at the Seminole Hotel in Jacksonville on the
evening of March 10 and the Florida Alumni As-
sociation was formed.
Now the University has an outjiost in the state of
Florida that is jealously guarding its interests and
working to increase its prestige. At least two meet-
ings are to be held each year, and although all the
members cannot be expected to attend on account of
the wide distances, everyone in the state has a direct
connective through his association with Chapel Hill,
and a constant stimulus for his interest.
The Florida group is now diligently searching the
state for those who have been lost, is sending to each
member a complete account of the activities of the
association, is devising ways of assisting in the gather-
ing of material for the forthcoming alumni catalogue,
is urging every alumnus to become a subscriber to
The Review, and is doing nvimerous other things to
help the immediate inauguration of the alumni work.
Those directly responsible for the work in Florida
are : H. Plant Osborne, president ; Wm. A. Seliell,
secretary ; and Frank W. Norris, treasurer. There
are others who have assisted actively, and all have
supported heartily.
D n D
A Job for You
The Review is in receijit from Secretaiw Grant of a
list of alumni — some 2,000 of them — concerning whom
he wishes information. The list has also gone to a
number of alumni who are in a position to assist in
furnishing the information, with the request that
tliey help to the limit in rediicing the list of those of
whom the University has lost track.
Here is a .job that will take an hour or two. How-
ever, it is extremely important and if you will do
it you may rest assured yo\ir services will be gen-
uinely worth while. Furthermore, if your experience
is like ours, you will find as you run down the list
a name here, a suggestion there that will evoke mem-
ories of the days when you were a care-free student
here beneath the oaks, which, of itself, will be a
most happy reward.
n n n
The Alumni Loyalty Fund
The attention of alumni is directed to the adver-
tisement of the Alumni Loyalty Fund ajjpearing in
this issue. Established in 1916, this fund has steadily
grown, until it amounts at present to $13,878.24, not
to mention the amounts which have been set aside
in its favor in the form of life insurance policies
carried by classes and individuals, and provisions
written in vai'ious wills.
At the coming commencement it is proposed to in-
corporate the fund in order that it may lend itself
more easily to the uses to which it should be put.
With that done, like the fund at Yale, which yields
approximately .$500,000 annually, it can be made the
ideal means through which individuals and classes
can further the work of the University. The Review
commends it most heartily to every one who would
have a part in the enrichment of the University life,
and particularly to the reunion classes who wish to
jilace their contributions to the University where they
will count most.
n n D
High School Week
High School Week, culminating in the victories of
the Elizabeth City debating team over that of the Wil-
son high school, and of the Charlotte and Goldshoro
track and tennis teams over all competitors, brought
to the campus for entertainment by the University
community 240 debaters, 220 participators in the
various athletic events, and teachers and other repre-
sentatives of the schools to the total number of 600.
The week, despite the showers of the second day,
was a distinct success. The second decade in the life
of the High School Debating Union was inaugurated
by the offering of a new Aycoek Memorial Cup, and
the 600 pupils and teachers came in contact with the
T''niversity at work — a wonderfully inspiring thing
in itself, which is far too seldom done by busy ahnnni,
much less by citizens of the State at large.
The Review has commented in previous years on
the significance of these contests. There is not any-
thing it cares to add to its previous comment other
Ihan this. We are convinced that hundreds of Noi"th
Carolina boys and girls have been held in the high
schools by the interest aroused by these contests ;
other hundreds have discovered through these eleven
annual pilgi-images to the University that there is
something beyond high school worthy of their high-
est ambition : and all who have followed through the
jirocedure culminating in the finals here on the
campus have developed an ability to evaluate mate-
rials and to correlate physical and mental powers in
a way that will add to their effectiveness as citizens
in the days to come. High School Week is, in reality,
an educational institution of the most genuine value
and merits the finest sort of support by the
University.
ALUMNI SECRETARIES CONFERENCE IN
CHAPEL HILL IN 1925
It is more than ]irobable that the annual Confer-
ence of Alumni and Alumnae Secretaries from all
over America will be held in Chapel Hill in 1925.
The last Conference was held at Cleveland, Ohio, from
April 12 to 14. Secretary Grant attended the Con-
ference and invited it to Chapel Hill. Those in at-
tendance were anxious to come to North Carolina
and when Carolina Inn is completed and in smooth
running order the invitation will be heartily accepted.
Ralph M. Harper, '04, formerly a member of the
International Committee of the Y. M. C. A., is now
rector of St. John's Episcopal Church, Winthrop,
Massachusetts.
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
211
TRUSTEES ADOPT BUILDING PROGRAM
The Executive Committee of the University's Board
of Trustees met in Chapel Hill in the middle of April,
and, after having received and examined the recom-
mendations of the Committee on Buildings, an-
nounced the following apportionment of the fund of
.$1,(J5U,000 voted by the last legislature. The total
of the items in the list comes to $1,637,700 — leaving
$12,300 not j^et scheduled.
Schedule of Allotments:
Permaiieut water supply $ 120,000
Women 's building 100,000
ChemisU-y building 400,000
Eemodelliug old buildings -. 125,000
Men 's dormitories 375,000
Koads and grading 50,000
Permanent departmental equipment 75,000
Sewers, heating, lighting extensions 115,000
Exercise and recreation grounds 50,000
Furniture and fixtures 45,000
Storage and repair shops 10,000
Infirmary addition 20,000
Library addition 25,000
Pliysical training building 40,000
Gymnasium repairs 3,000
Biolog}' basement floor 12,000
Extra finish, law building 7,700
Railway and eciuipment 65,000
Total :. $1,637,700
Of course this program will not be adhered to with
absolute rigidity — there are obliged to be modifica-
tions, from time to time, as construction proceeds.
But there will probably be no important deviations
from the present expansion plan.
$100,000 for Women's Building
The question of the women's building naturally has
occupied a prominent place in discussion of the pro-
gram, since the excited arguments of a few weeks
ago. The appropriation of $100,000 is less than was
once proposed, but il seems to promise satisfactory
accommodations — for the next two or three years, any-
how — for as many women as cannot be comfortably
housed in the town.
Instead of going up in the grove in front of the
Battle place, the women's building will be placed on
the University property between the Episcopal church
and the Raleigh road, where the late Eben Alexander
u-sed to live, and after him the late C. W. Bain, and
then J. B. Bullitt. Wallace E. Caldwell is occupying
the house now.
Old Dormitories to be Renovated
In their i-i!ceiit consullations, the committees of the
Trustees made the etfort to arrive at a balanced
scheme of building. That is, not to spend all the
available money on new .structures at the expense of
Ihc old ones or at the expense of necessary equipment.
To make tlu; ohl buildings sanitary and habitable,
$12r),0()0 will l)e spent. It is not possible to change
them into modern fireproof dormitories, but they will
he thoroiiglily renovated and made clean and livable.
New Roads to be Developed
An important decision of the Trustees is to proceed
at once with certain roads. One will leave the Chapel
Hill-Pittsboro-Pinehurst highway a little way south of
the campus and run eastward, following the natural
contour of the ground, to emerge on the Raleigh road
this side of the cemetery between Emerson Field and
the new class athletic field. Another — construction
of which is now under way — will extend along Cam-
eron avenue eastward to meet the Raleigh road bej'ond
the cemetery. A third will leave this Cameron ave-
nue extension near the corner of the Battle place,
run ahmg the .south edge of that property, curve
northward to meet the road by the Bradshaw and
Hibbard homes, and come out on the main street of
the town between the Lawson and Kennette homes.
Unorganized Athletics Promoted
The phj'sical training building is designed to pro-
mote not organized athletics but recreation for the
student bodj- as a whole. It will be of frame and
will be in the woods south of the campus. The Uni-
versity is not spending a penny on organized ath-
letics. This activity has to be taken care of, inde-
pendently, bj- the Athletic Association.
The chemistry building Ls .to be to the south of
the power house, in what is now the woods. The labo-
ratory part of it is to be one-story high, with over-
head lighting ; eventuallj' this will be surrounded by
the sections of the structure devoted to recitation
rooms.
POPULAR QUARTETTE TO RETURN
Features for the coming commencement are not
wanting. On Monday the "Wonder Team" of 1903
will cross bats with the faculty. On Tuesday there
will be the Virginia-Carolina baseball game — the clos-
ing one of the series.
Now enters the famous University quartette that
dates back to the early years of the century — the one
that did lots of singing and popularized "Hail Caro-
lina" — Woollen, Callaway, Mangum, and Ehring-
haus.
Tradition has it that the first verse and the chorus
of this song had already been written, but it wasn't
sufficiently long to give the singers a chance to show
their "wares." It was orderd at one practice that
each member was to submit a stanza at the next meet-
ing. This was done and Mangum's and Woollen's
stanzas were accepted. (Neither Ehringhaus nor
Gallavvay supplied this information ! ) Mangum is
credited with the romantic verse which begins
"'Neath the Oaks" while Woollen is charged with
being responsible for the more solemn strain ' ' Though
the Storms of Life Assail."
Since the end of their joint singing J. C. B. Ehrmg-
haus has been practicing law in Elizabeth City, and
was for a long time State solicitor; Charles S. Man-
gum has taught Anatomy in the I'niversity Medical
School a;Rl helped guide Carolina athleties; Gaston
C. (Jailaway is in the real estate business in Char-
lotte; and Charles T. Woollen has l)een with the
I'niversity, serving as Registrar, (Jradiiate Manager
of Athletics. I5usiiu'ss Manager, aiul in various other
capacities.
The singing of the quartette is to be one of the
features of the Alumni Luncheon at Swain Hall on
Alumni Day.
Rev. F. M. Osborne, '99, a member of the theolog-
ical faculty of the University of the South, has re-
cently been elected Chaplain of that institution.
212
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
HEARD AND SEEN AROUND THE WELL
The arboretum is painted ivith the glory of spring
and perfumed by her garments. The crack of the
bat smacks noisily against the sides of the Medical
building and drifts gently into the shady depths of
Battle's park. The campus politician runs back and
forth around the Well herding together liis cohorts
of freshman and sophomore votes. Next week the
president of the student body will be elected, also
editors, managers, and class officei-s. Then the Golden
Fleece will tap, Phi Beta Kappa will initiate, exami-
nations will begin and nothing more will be heard
or seen aroiind the Well.
Politicians Run True to Form
Politicians run true to form. A week ago President
Harmon announced that on the following Monday in
Chapel the nominations for next year's president
would be held. On the appointed day two men were
nominated from the i-ising junior class. Then some
wily one moved that the "constitution" be amended
so that others would be eligible. "Mule" Shirley,
as president pi"o tem, said he did not know what to
do, that this was not his job anyhow. Now the whole
job has to be done over after the amendment has
been put to ballot. Gentlemen of 1921 and 1922, does
this sound familiar? But I really believe that some
progress is apparent. The denunciations have become
less violent and there is much more good humor. One
is less reminded of Mexico.
Putting the presidency of the campus on the ballot
of the whole student body has increased by so much
the political tension of this season. In fact the cam-
pus seems to move as a political unit to a surprising
extent. From the various rumors one collects it can
be gathered that the editorial offices, about ten in
number, the class offices, about twelve, the athletic
association jobs, about five, the presidency of the
student body, and the literary society presidencies,
these offices, about thirty in number, are lumped
together and divided by trading between various
political factions. For example, the president of the
Di society may be really chosen by men who are not
even members of the society.
Easter Dances a Success
The Easter dances were a success. Of course they
were not perfect. The music was not completely satis-
factory. There were almost as many girls as boys
present the first evening. This, coupled with the
disuse of the dance program, made the situation a
little embarrassing to boys and girls alike. The house
parties at the S. A. E. and Sigma Chi houses relieved
the congestion at the boarding houses. The rule pro-
hibiting "late dates" which was worked out by the
dance leaders, the boarding house chaperones, and the
University, was received with remarkably little objec-
tion and was fairly well observed. The girls were
more beautiful than usual and their clothes were
absolutely satisfactory to the most artistic and most-
exacting chaperone present. The dancing was con-
spicuous by the absence of the extreme. For the
first time in years no one was heard to say "Look at
the way that girl is dancing." The conduct of the
men present was all that could be desired. Of coui'se
the perennial alumnus bacchanalianus bloomed. How-
ever, through the activity of the dance leaders this
crop was nipped in the bud. John Bonner, treasurer
of the German club, took the joy out of life the last
night b.y asking the alumni present to come back to
the door and give a free-will offering. It seems that
the German club was about to come out in the hole.
About fifty dollars was collected in this manner, indi-
cating the presence of about twenty-five alumni. The
dances show decided evidence of return to "nor-
malcy." They were very creditable.
PM Beta Kappa Oration
The University chapter of Phi Beta Kappa begins
a new plan this spring when it has a Phi Beta
Kappa oration and a formal announcement of the
new members. This has been impossible until now
because of the necessity of waiting until the final
gi-ades were obtained on the candidates in June.
Under the present plan the spring quarter is omitted
and the selection is possible after the winter quarter
examinations. This initiation ceremony will be dis-
tinguished this year by the presence of Oscar M.
Voorhees, national secretary of the Phi Beta Kappa
society. Mr. Voorhees will deliver the oration at
8:00 P. M. May 1st. After his address public an-
nouncement of initiates will be made.
What the Blanket Fee Does
Our debating team lost to Washington and Lee and
defeated Johns Hopkins. This, the fourth annual
clash of this triangle, was concerned with cancella-
tion of inter-allied debts. The Tar Heel affirmative
team composed of C. A. Peeler and J. W. Deyton lost
to Washington and Lee here by two to one. The nega-
tive team, George C. Hampton and Victor V. Young,
received a unanimous decision over Johns Hopkins in
Baltimore. After the Baltimore debate Young and
Hampton met and defeated George Washington Uni-
versity on the same query. Not content with this
second laurel Young representing the negative and
J. Y. Kerr the affirmative on the abolition of capital
punishment entered the National Literary Society
debate in Washington. In this contest Young de-
feated the representatives of six other institutions
and won the medal and scholarship offered. We have
just been defeated by Kentucky in the Southern
Oratorical contest. George Hampton has been selected
to compete in the Peace Oratorical. Then we will
meet the University of Kentucky in debate at Lex-
ington. We have certainly had a full season and a
fairly victorious one so far. All this unprecedented
interest and activity is the result of the blanket fee.
Emilie Rose Knox
Last night, Fi-iday, April 20, the campus had its
annual pleasure of being serenaded from the steps
of Memorial Hall by Miss Emilie Rose Knox. Miss
Knox has not only won high honors in the musical
world but a permanent place in the heart of Caro-
lina. After her concerts the boys gather around
the entrance and cheer until they get some more
music. It makes quite an attractive scene to see the
hundreds of boys standing in silence as they drink in
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
213
the tones of the violin. The atmosphere of spring
in Chapel Hill is very favorable to such a tableaux
of youth and feeling.
Lear Loan Fund Established
New re-enforcements have come to the rescue of
the self-help students in engineering. The schedule
of these students has about made it impossible for
them to work in the dining hall. Professor J. E.
Lear bid for the wiring contract on new buildings
last year. His figures were the lowest and the con-
tract was awarded to him. Using student help he
finished the job and cleared $5,000. This amount has
been set aside as the Lear Loan Fund for engineer-
ing students.
Dinner Hour to Pass
The faculty has under discussion a new schedule
of classes which would eliminate the fixed dinner
hour. Classes would run from 8 :30 to 5 :00 without
stop. Under this schedule the classes would be so
distributed as to make class-rooms and laboratories
in continuous use. This economy through shifts
would also extend to the University's facilities for
recreation and exercise. But do you remember the
strenuous efforts vou made to keep from having an
afternoon class?— >. F. B., '16, April 21, 1923.
PHILADELPHIA ALUMNI MEET
The marvelous expansion of the University of
North Carolina, not only physically in the way of the
going up of new buildings upon tlie campus in every
direction, but also in the progress made in putting
the University in the front ranks of modern educa-
tion so that it stands shoulder to shoulder with Har-
vard, Yale and Princeton in scholarship, was de-
scribed to the Philadelphia alumni of the University
in a brilliant address by Daniel L. Grant, alumni
secretary. Mr. Grant" met about fifty of the Univer-
sity alumni at a dinner held in the City Club in Phil-
adelphia at 6 :30 on April 15.
James Lee Love, of Gaston, formerly a member of
the faculty of Harvard University, presided over the
dinner and gave witty reminiscences of the older
days of the University under the presidency of Dr.
Kemp P. Battle, the days which produced Mclver,
Alderman and Aycoek ; Howard A. Banks, associate
editor of the Sunday School Times, spoke briefly of
the dawn of the new era of the University under Pres-
ident George T. Winston; and after Mr. Grant's il-
luminating address. Professor Edwin il. Wilson,
headmaster of the Haverford School for Bojs, opened
a question box which brought out much additional in-
formation about our great school of the Soufli at
Chapel Hill.
A constitution was adopted and the following of-
ficers elected for the ensuing year : James Lee Love,
pi-esident; Howard A. Banks, first vice-president;
Professor Edwin M. Wilson, second vicc-i)resident ;
Dr. Blackwell Sawyer, secretarj'-treasurer.
The executive committee chosen consists of the four
officers of the association and Dr. John Harvey of
the University of Pennsylvania; Dr. T. Graham Mil-
ler of the faculty of the University of Pennsylvania
Medical School; Dr. Charles It. Turner, dean of the
Dental Department of the University of Pennsyl-
vania; George V. Strong, a prominent Philadelphia
attorney; and S. M. Schenck, of the University of
Pennsylvania.
The following were present at the dinner: Judge
S. E. ShuU of Pennsylvania Circuit Court ; Dr. Joshua
Sherman of Lancaster, Pa., Fred S. Wetzell, I. V.
Giles, E. V. Cordon and Robert Deitz, of Philadel-
phia; Drs. J. L. Poston and R. A. Ross, Episcopal
Hospital; Drs. F. R. Robbins, Graham Ramsey and
J. C. Tayloe, Pennsylvania Hospital; Dr. F. M.
Clarke, Presbyterian Hospital; Drs. E. W. Clark and
E. R. Saleeby, Cooper Hospital (Camden) ; Dr. H.
S. Clark, Methodist Hospital ;■ Dr. John Harvey, Uni-
versity Hospital; S. M. Crisp, T. D. Elliott, G. F.
Parker, R. C. Smith, S. M. Schenck, Josh Tayloe, C.
R. Toy, L. M. Fowler, N. A. Fox, T. E. Jones, E. L.
Kellum, T. B. Mitchell, G. D. Morris, F. M. Patter-
son, W. C. Coley, B. C. West, Oscar Goodwin, W. A.
Rourk, Jr., W. V. Costner, H. M. Riggins, L. A.
Wilson, John Frazier.
STROUD JORDAN A MANUFACTURING
CHEMIST
Dr. Stroud Jordan, of the class of 1909, is now con-
nected with the Heide Manufacturing Company, one
of the principal manufacturing confectioners of this
country. In his capacity of chemist for the company.
Dr. Jordan is attempting to take much of the empiri-
cism from candy manufacture and to place the art
upon a scientific basis. Such efliort is sure to produce
positive and permanent results where indifferent and
temporary success has attended the efforts of the
candy maker. The results which have been attained
are now being given to the public in a series of arti-
cles in The Candy Manufacturer. The first of these
articles, entitled The Value of Decolorizing Carbons
to the Candy Manufacturer, appeared in the Novem-
ber issue of 1922. Up to the present the other pub-
lished ai-ticles are Some Causes of Colors in Sugar
Products and their Prevention; Color Comparison
and Determination; Commercial Colors^their Uses
and Abuses; and Standardization of Colors for Con-
fectioners' Use. In view of the recognized psycho-
logical value of color in the sale of candy, this feature
has occupied much attention from the chemist and the
manufacturers' salesman. The titles of articles yet
to appear are The Manufacture of Invert Sugar on
an Ordinary Factory Scale ; Air Holes in Confection-
ery and their Role in the Fermentation of Centers
and Creams; What is a Thermometer, Why and How
to Use It; and Inversion of Sugar in Process and the
Prevention of this Side Reaction. The variety of the
topics of these articles is sufficient evidence of the
wide range of problems which present themselves to
such an industry.
H. D. Meyer, of the School of Public Welfare, is
the author of Extension Bulletin Vol. II, No. 10 en-
titled The Commencement Program. The publication,
which contains information concerning all phases of
commencement programs, was prepared at the sug-
gestion of county superintendents "^f public instruc-
tion and rural school supervisors, and is intended to
get the school commencement out of the rut in which
it has been in recent years.
214
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
GENERAL DIRECTORY OF ALUMNI OFFICERS
lu order to bring all the activities of the alumni into closer
unity, Secretary Grant has jareijared the following directory
of alumni officers and a model constitution which local asso-
ciations can adopt in perfecting local organizations :
General Association Officers
President, Walter Murphy, '92, Salisbury; vice-president,
C. L. Weill, '07, Greensboro; second vice-president, Kobert H.
Wright, '97, Greenville; secretary and treasurer, Daniel L.
Grant, '21, Chapel Hill.
Board of Directors
First district, J. C. B. Ehriughaus, '01, Elizabeth City;
second district, W. L. Long, '09, Eoauoke Kapids; third dis-
trict, Leslie Weil, '95, Goldsboro; fourth district, O. J. Cof-
fin, '09, Raleigh; fifth district. Burton Craige, '97, Winston-
Salem; sixth district. Miss Kathrine Eobinsou, '21, Eayette-
ville; seventh district, Isaac S. London, '06, Rockingham;
eighth district. Miss Mary Henderson, '15, Salisbury; ninth
district, Robert Lassiter, '98, Charlotte; tenth district, R. E.
Williams, '02, Asheville; out of State, Shepard Bryan, '91,
Atlanta, Ga.
Finance Committee
Daniel L. Grant, '21, Chairman, Chapel Hill; C. L. Weill,
'07, Greensboro; John W. Umstead, '09, Durham.
Campus Beautiful Committee
Wade H. Atkinson, '88, Washington, D. C. ; Leslie Weil, '95,
Goldsboro; A. H. Patterson, '91, Chapel Hill.
Alumni Loyalty Fund
A. M. Scales, '92, Greensboro; Leslie Weil, '95, Goldsboro;
L. K. Wilson, '99, Chapel Hill; A. W. Haywood, '04, New
York City; W. T. Shore, '05, Charlotte; J. A. Gray, '08,
Winston-Salem.
Alumni Class Secretaries Bureau Executive Committee
W. S. Bernard, '00; H. M. WagstafE, '99; T. J. Wilson, Jr.,
'94; L. J. Phipps, '22; and the Alumni Secretary, ex-officio,
all of Chapel Hill.
LOCAL ASSOCIATIONS
Alleghany — E. A. Doughton, '83, president; and Floyd
Grouse, '16, secretary.
Anson — W. L. McKinnon, '02, president; and C. L. Gates,
'12, secretary.
Beaufort — S. C. Bragaw, '90, president; and Charles F.
Cowell, '12, secretary.
Bertie — F. D. Winston, '79, president; and Tyre C. Taylor,
'21, secretary.
Birmingham — S. S. Heide, '04, president; and T. E. Eagles,
'08, secretary.
Buncombe — C. B. Hyatt, '17, president; and C. Kelly
Hughes, '16, secretary.
Cabarrus — L. T. Hartsell, '96, president; and Miles H.
WolfE, Gr., '22, secretary.
Caldwell — W. B. Lindsay, '18, president; and W. Clyde Sud-
dreth, '17, secretary.
Catawba — A. A. Shuford, Jr., '00, president.
Chapel Hill — M. C. S. Noble, '81, president; and Collier
Cobb, '84, secretary.
Chatham— W. D. Siler, '00, president; and D. L. Bell, '15,
secretary.
Chicago — Jas. H. Winston, '04, president; and C. E.
Thomas, '12, secretary.
Chowan — F. P. Wood, '16, president; and E. D. Dixon, '10,
secretary.
Cleveland — Peyton McSwain, '18, president; and D. Wyeth
Royster, '16, secretary.
Craven — G. A. Barden, '19, president; and Charles Ives, '21,
secretary.
Cumberland — R. S. McNeill, '10, president; and Murchison
Walker, '19, secretary.
Davidson — J. M. Daniel, Jr., '12, president; H. G. West,
'19, secretary; J. E. Raper, '21, treasurer.
Duplin — Organized, but names of officers not reported.
DurJiam — R. H. Sykes, '99, president; and C. McD. Carr,
'05, secretary.
Edgecombe — W. Stamps Howard, '97, president; and E.
Prank Andrews, '19, secretary.
Florida — H. Plant Osborne, '09, president; and Wm. A.
Sehell, '10, secretary.
Forsyth — J. E. Alexander, "95, president; and Moses Shapiro,
'16, secretary.
Gaston — T. C. Quiekel, "98, president; and Thomas J. Braw-
ley, '20, treasurer.
Georgia — T. B. Higdon, '05, chairman organization com-
mittee.
Granville — A. W. Graham, Jr., '12, president; and F. W.
Hancock, Jr., '16, secretary.
Guilford — W. S. Dickson, '07, president; and E. B. Eives,
'21, secretary.
Halifax (North) — C. A. Wyche, '01, president; and L. N.
Taylor, '10, secretary.
Harnett — E. L. Godwin, '02, president; and M. T. Spears,
'13, secretary.
Harvard-Tech (Boston, Mass.) — W. M. York, '18, president;
and M. C. S. Noble, Jr., '21, secretary.
Haywood — T. L. Gwyn, '03, chairman of organization com-
mittee.
Henderson — R. C. Sample, '13, president; and R. Lee Whit-
mire, '21, secretary.
High Point — Carter Dalton, '06, chairman of organization
committee.
Hoke-Red Springs — B. P. McMillan, '82, president; and W.
B. Towuseud, '14, secretary.
Iredell — L. W. MacKessou, '03, president.
Johnston — Organized, but officers not reported.
Lee — J. D. Gunter, '81, president; and D. L. St. Clair, '01,
secretary.
Lenoir-Greene — E. J. Perry, '17, president; and E. T. Allen,
'14, secretary.
Lincoln — A. L. Quiekel, '95, president; and K. B. Nixon,
'05, secretary.
Lumbertou — Dickson McLean, '10, president; and Ertel Car-
lyle, '20, secretary.
Macon— S. H. Lyle, Jr., '08, president; and R. D. Sisk, '99,
secretary.
Martin — Sylvester Hassell, '62, president; and Harry A.
Biggs, '08, secretary.
McDowell — J. W. Pless, '17, secretary.
Mecklenburg — Hamilton C. Jones, '06, president; and W.
Carey Dowd, Jr., '17, secretary.
Montgomery — Claudius Dockery, '87, president; and W. A.
Cochran, '98, secretary.
Moore — Organized, but officers not reported.
Nash (Rocky Mount) — E. T. Fountain, '07, president; and
Frank S. Spruill, '83, secretary.
New Hanover (Brunswick) — J. G. Murphy, '01, president;
and L. J. Poissou, '10, secretary.
New York — Organized, but officers not reported.
Northampton — W. H. S. Burgwyn, '08, president; and W.
J. Long, '14, secretary.
Orange — John W, Graham, '57, president; and J. C. Webb,
'01, secretary.
Pasquotank — J. Q. A. Wood, '73, president; and J. K.
Wilson, '05, secretary.
Pee Dee Association of South Carolina — E. D. Sallenger, '02,
president; and A. L. M. Wiggins, '13, secretary.
Perquimans— T. A. Cox, '90, president; and Silas M. Whed-
bee, '22, secretary.
Philadelphia — Jas. Lee Love, '84, president; and Blackwell
Sawyer, '21, secretary-treasurer.
Pitt — F. G. James, '79, president; and M. K. Blount, '16,
secretary.
Eiehmond — W. N. Everett, Jr., '11, president; and I. S.
Loudon, '06, secretary.
Richmond, Va. — Benjamin Bell, Jr., '01; W. B. Jerman,
'09, and O. R. Cunningham, '20, compose organization com-
mittee.
Rockingham — W. J. Gordon, '03, president; and J. M.
Gwynn, '18, secretary.
Rock Hill, S. C. — A. H. Byuum, '01, chairman organization
committee.
Eowan — A. H. Price, '95, president; and J. F. Hurley, Jr.,
'19, secretary.
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
215
Rowland — J. McN. Smith, '06, president: nnd .T. F. Sin-
clair, '14, secretary.
Rutherford — R. E. Price, '18, president; and D. F. Morrow,
'03, secretary.
Sampson — Fitzhugh Whitfield, '11, president; and Miss
Fannie E. Vann, Gr. '21, secretary.
Scotland — J. D. PhUlips, '12, president; and W. S. Dunbar,
'15, secretary.
Stanley — T. A. Hathcock, '92, president ; and H. C. Turner,
'16, secretary.
Surry — J. H. Allred, '16, president; and C. B. Sp.-irger, '22,
secretary.
Union — Organized, but officers not reported.
Vance — Organized, but officers not reported.
Wake — John B. Wright, '98, president ; and R. B. House,
'16, secretary.
Washington, D. C. — Wade H. Atkinson, '88, president; and
M<Tngum Weeks, '15, secretary.
Wayne — W. A. Dees, '11, president; and Kenneth C. Royall,
'14, secretary.
Wilkes — R. N. Hackett, '87, president; and J. A. Rousseau,
'12. secretary.
Wilson — George W. Connor, '92, president; and Bryce Little,
'20, secretary.
Unorganized Associations
The following places which have a sufficiently large num-
ber of alumni to do effective work do not have organized asso-
ciations: Alamance, Ashe, Bladen, Burke, Cartaret, Cherokee,
Columbia, S. C, Columbus, Dallas, Texas, Franklin, Gates,
Greenville, S. C, Halifa.x (South), Hertford, Jones, Louisiana,
ilaryland, Norfolk, Va., Oklahoma, Onslow, Person, Pitts-
burgh, Pa., Randolph, Spartanburg, S. C, Swain, Transylvania,
Warren.
Class Organizations
The class officers are not listed here. The Secretary for
each class that has one is listed at the top of the class notes
in The Re\tew. There is no record here of the permanent
class presidents; in fact, many of the classes have no perma-
nent officers. For tliese, meii .-ire now being secured to serve
under a special appointment until the class holds its next
reunion. A complete directory of all class officers will be
printed later.
Model Local Association Constitution
. The following specimen pl;in of organization for local alumni
associations seems to be good to begin with. Several groups
recently forming associations have followed this suggestion
very closely, and found it satisf.-ictory.
We, the undersigned, all being graduates or former students
of the University of North Carolina, have associated ourselves
under the following constitution for the purposes herein stated.
I. Name
The name of this organization shall be the
Alumni Association of the
Hniversity of North Carolina.
II. Object
This association is formed to promote, through co-operation
with the General .'\.lumni Association of the University of
North Carolina, (a) a closer fellowship among the alumni and
students of the University, (h) the adi'ancement of the inter-
ests of the University, and (c) the promotion of literary and
scientific pursuits and matters kindred thereto.
III. Membership
Membership in this association shall be of two classes: (a)
Active, (b) Honorary. All grad;iates and former students of
the University of North Carolina residing at
shall be active members of this
association. Former officers, faculty members, trustees, and
those otherwise ufficially connected with the University shall
be entitled to honorary membership; and others as this asso-
ciation may invite.
rv. Officers .\nd Duties
The officers of this Association shall be:
1. A president whose duties .shall be those of presiding offi-
cer, and who shall be ex-offlcif) chairman of the Executive
Committee. He shall appoint two members of the E.\ecutive
Committee.
2. A vice-president who sh;ill, in the absence of the presi-
dent, act as presiding officer, and perform all other duties of
that office.
3. A secretary-treasurer who shall perform the duties of the
secretary's office, and shall also be charged with the duties of
notifying the General Alumni Association of the University of
North Carolina (at Chapel Hill) of changes of addresses, of
deaths and marriages among the alumni of the University in
this vicinity, of public honors bestowed upon them, and such
other information as should be a matter of record in the office
of the General Association. He shall also collect the annual
dues for the local and General Association and keep the ac-
counts of the Association. He shall also be a
member of the Executive Committee.
4. An executive committee of five members. The Executive
Committee shall be composed of the officers named above and
two additional ones to be appointed by the Chair. The
President of the Association shall be Chairman of the E.\eeu-
tive Committee. It shall be trusted with the general manage-
ment of the association. It shall have the power to call meet-
ings from time to time, appoint special committees, and act
upon the reports submitted by such committees, and it shall
be its duty to receive suggestions from members and take
action upon them.
v. Term of Office
The length of the term of the officers and members of the
Executive Committee shall be one year, or until their successors
are designated.
VI. Meetings
The Association shall meet on October 12th of each year, or
as near thereto as practicable. At this meeting shall "be held
the annual election of officers. Other meetings shall be held
or at tlie call of the Executive Committee.
VII. Dues
The annual membership dues in this Association shall be
in addition to the annual dues of $1.00 for
the General Association at Chapel Hill. These fees are to be
collected by the Secretary-Treasurer (or the General Asso-
ciation fee may be collected direct by its Finance Committee).
VIII. Amendments
Amendments, abrogations, or further provisions to this pact
may be made at any regular meeting of the
by a two-thirds vote.
NEW EPISCOPAL CHURCH
The proposed churcJi foi- tlie parish of tlie Chapel
of the Cross is designed by Hobart B. Upjohn, arehi-
teet, first as a typical village church and second as a
type of Perpendicular Gothic, a style prevalent among
the protcstant Episcojjal churches of the last decade.
The building is intended to be of stone to match in
color and texture the present church, which will
become the chapel, thus retaining in concrete form
the memories and traditions of the parish. Even a
casual examination of the picture will show how suc-
cessful the architect has been in creating an ecclesi-
astical group, and the use of the spire on the domi-
nant tower brings the whole mass into an harmonious
composition.
The tentative plans of the building show a seat-
ing capacity of al)out 450, a choir ample for 36 sing-
ers, and the general arrangement of the church proper
in line with the age-old traditions and canons of the
church. Ample sacristy and robing rooms are pro-
vided, as well as two routes for the processional and
recessional of the choir.
The contemplated additions to the parish house
comprise two stories of class rooms for the Sunday
school, auditorium, church offices, all in the style of
the main building.
The old church, jiarish house, new church, and
cloister form a clos(>, in the center of which a memorial
is ]iroposed for those "who went forth to battle and
returned not" as well as for the blessed dead of the
|)arish.
216
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
BASEBALL RESULTS AND PROSPECTS
Naturally, when the baseball season for 1923
niH-ned, Carolina students and followers began specn-
latiou as to the chance of producing another team like
the one of 1922 which played 21 games, lost two of
them and won 19. It was evident from the start
that Coach Bill Fetzer had excellent material with
which to -work toward that end, but it was also obvi-
ous that the team would not be as brilliant as that
of last year, at least not during its first games.
Prom the 1922 Southern Championship nine Caro-
lina had lost her two most brilliant pitchers, Llewel-
lyn and Wilson, with only Bryson left among the
veterans. The pitching staff presented the first and
greatest problem and the Carolina coach began at
once to work with Bryson and his new men. John
Coffey and Allen Moore had seen some varsity in-
nings, but not many, and the rest of the twirlers
came up from last year's freslunen. Frank Coxn.
former Yale pitching ace, was added to the squad,
but his old strength has not yet shown itself with
the Carolina team. Among these new pitchers Bill
Ferebee is giving great promise. Coltrane may de-
velop and Finch has possibilities.
Captain Roy Morris is back at his old post behind
the bat, and through the Guilford game he had hit
two home runs ; the first led to a victory over N. C.
State and the second prevented a defeat at the hands
of Guilford College. Allan MeGee, a varsity letter
man, is also back for the position and is substituting.
Simm Wrenn, former Davidson star. Homer Starling,
from the 1922 freshman team, and Merle Bonner,
wlio made his letter in the outfield last year, are also
all good catchers and there will be no trouble be-
hind the plate this year.
In the infield Coach Fetzer lost only one man, Fred
Morris, for two years the best third baseman in the
State. Shirley is back at his old place at first and in
as good form as ever; Joe McLean, veteran of threi'
years standing at second, has been playing his posi-
tion again in spite of his medical studies, which make
it hard for him to get time for practice. Morris Mc-
Donald is playing his third year at short.
Coach Fetzer began to work on his recruits to find
a third baseman. Fuquay. Carmichael, Starling,
Griffin and Bonner were thought of. but none seemed
to fill the bill. At last he tried "Touchdown" Jones,
who plaj-ed first for the freshmen last year, and Jones
at the time of this writing has played in all the
games through the Guilford contest.
In the outfield Sweetman and Bonner were the only
regulars. Bonner caught the first three games be-
cause of Morris' sore arm. but he is now back in left
field and is making a good record. Sweetman is a
clever fielder, but his hitting has fallen very low.
For the third place, in right, there was a wealth of
material, mostly in bulk, to work from, and Griffin.
Gibson, Carmichael, Fuquay and Coffey have all
beeen used with still no decision reached as to what
man shall hold the place as a regular.
The Season
At the time of this writing the team has played
seven games, won three, lost three and tied one. The
season opened with the Navy at Wilson and early-
season form was clearly in evidence. The middies
won the game 5 to 4 in spite of the superb twirling
of Herman Bryson who held his opponents to 5 hits.
Tar Heel errors lost the affair, Joe McLean, who had
practiced for only two days, being responsible for
two of them.
The next game was plaj'ed with Maryland on the
following day, March 31, and this time Cai'olina won
by a score of 12 to 6. Coffey, Coltrane and Ferebee
were used on the mound and Ferebee showed up
well in his first varsity game. He was credited with
the win.
The Easter Monday game with Davidson was
|)layed at Gastonia, Casey Morris' home town, and
again Carolina was victor, the score being 12 to 5.
Brj-son pitched most of the game but Coach Fetzer
again tried Ferebee for three innings and the young-
ster looked good for the second time.
The Lynchburg College game at Chapel Hill on
April 16 resulted in a defeat. Coach Fetzer used it
as a pitching and batting practice, and, as the stu-
dents termed it, "Lynchburg just out-practiced us."
The score was 5 to 4.
The fii'st important inter-state game played at home
came with Trinity on April 18 and the hard-hitting
Methodist team won the victory, 4 to 2. Bryson
started on the mound for Carolina and was touched
for 5 hits and 4 nuis during the first and before
anyone was out in the second inning, Bill Ferebee
then won the hearts of Carolina students by going
in. retiring the side with two men on base and allow-
ing no more runs for the contest. The Carolina
team played well in the field but could not hit Demp-
ster, the Trinity southpaw, to any run-making degree
except for the two runs secured.
With this showing sport writers were predicting
championship honors for any other team except for
the Tar Heels until Carolina met the undefeated N.
C. State team in Raleigh on April 21. Herman Bry-
son pitched good ball. Casey Morris hit a home-run,
and Carolina won. Tar Heel stock went soaring
again.
It fell off for the third or fourth time, however,
when Guilford held the Fetzer team to a tie on Emer-
son field on April 24. The playing of the Carolina
team was poor, ten errors being marked against the
players. It was excused as a team slump after the
great trial in Raleigh on the previous Saturday, but
still the large number of errors looked bad. The
team's Southern trip began on April 30. and every-
one is looking for some victories farther down in
Dixie.
On this trip Carolina plays Auburn, the University
of Alabama, the University of Georgia. Mercer, and
Georgia Tech. Southern alumni were clamoring to
see the Carolina team and this trip is being substi-
tuted for the usual journey north.
After^ this trip the team meets Wake Forest at
Chapel 'Hill on May 8 and N. C. State four' days
later. Wake Forest will be played at Wake Forest
on May 24 and the .second Trinity game will be
played in Durham on June 5.
The last two Virginia games have been saved for
the close of the season. The second will be in Char-
lottesville on June 11, and third at Chapel Hill on
Alumni Day, June 12.
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
217
Carolina Defeats Virginia
For the seventh time in succession the University
of North Carolina defeated the University of Virginia
in baseball, when the Tar Heels won the famous
classic in Greensboro on April 28, by the score of 2
to 1. A crowd, estimated at 6,000, saw the game,
which was played after clearing skies had followed a
downpour of rain.
The real hero of the game was young Bill Perebee,
a sophomore from New Bern, who was sent to the
mound by Coach Fetzer and who remained there for
all nine innings, allowing the Virginia team only
four hits and one run. Ferebee is only 18 and it
was his second varsity tryout of importance. He
strengthened his hold on the hearts of (Carolina stu-
dents and Carolina fans and helped to make athletic
history by carrying Tar Heel victories into the
seventh consecutive win.
In spite of a heavy field only one error was
recorded in the contest, and "Monk" McDonald, who
starred with his bat and also in his position at short,
got credit for it. McDonald scored Carolina's first
run in the third inning when he hit a long hard fly
to left for two bases, was sacrificed to third by Joe
McLean and tagged the plate on Merle Bonner's dou-
ble to right. McDonald hit safely again in the fifth
inning but it did not count toward a score.
In the first half of the sixth inning Virginia made
her only run. Ferebee walked Deal, who stole second
and scored on Deitrick'.s single to center.
This tied the count and "Mule" Shirley came up
first for Carolina in the second half of the inning.
He led off with a double to right center. Captain
' ' Casey ' ' Morris followed with a terrific smash in the
same direction, Shirley came home, and the game was
won. Morris' drive made the third one of importance
hit by the Carolina slugger to result in a win or tie
this year. His home run against State College won
that game and his hit for four bases tied the Guilford
battle that resulted in a tie.
The Greensboro game carried all the old color and
fire of former days. Usually it is the second of the
Virginia series : this year it came first. Two glori-
ous groups of college girls, one from N. C. C. W. and
the other from G. C. W., were on hand in a riot of
colors, songs and j'ells for their brother institution
down State, ilore than a thousand students from
Chapel Hill went by special train, regular train, car
or bus to see the old rivals meet, and Greensboro ex-
tended to them a warm hand of welcome.
The two women's colleges entertained in honor of
Carolina and Virginia students after the game and
two dances were given down town. It was the third
successive victory in Greensboro, the university band
was there, and the student body was well organized.
The showing of the team, Ferebee 's pitching strength,
and the support of the students make things look
hopeful for more wins. — G. W. Lankford, '23.
1903 VARSITY TO PLAY FACULTY
The Varsity baseball outfit of 1903, the "Wonder
Team" that won 19 games, lost two, and tied one,
is, according to a press note emanating from ]\Iarion
on April 22, to seek the scalp of the faculty sluggers
on Emerson Field Monday afternoon of commence-
ment week.
The doughty warriors of yore who are to be in the
fray are : Manager George Graham, mill owner, of
Charlotte; outfielder John Donnellj', tuberculosis
specialist, of Charlotte; outfielder Wade Oldham,
chemist, of Birmingham, Alabama; outfielder D. F.
Giles, state senator, of Marion; first sacker Earl Holt,
teacher of Oak Ridge; second baseman John Cheshire,
farmer, of Tarboro; short stop "Bill" Carr, mill
owner, of Durham; third baseman Frank Smathers,
lawyer, of Miami, Florida, and Hal V. Worth, lum-
berman, of Raleigh; catcher R. P. Noble, X-ray
specialist, of Raleigh; pitchers George Green, lawyer,
of Weldon, and Peck Hart, manufacturer, of Tar-
boro.
A BUILDING BOOM AT CHAPEL HILL
yuite aside from University cortstruction, there is
a real building boom in Chapel Hill.
Architects and builders who have cheeked up on
new operations estimate that perhaps $500,000 worth
of buildings will go up this ■ spring and summer.
Largest of all the projects is the Carolina Inn, but
this is only one of many. Stores are rising along
the main street, and the construction of residences is
in progress in every part of town.
Among the professors who are putting up homes
are James F. Royster, Sturgis E. Leavitt, Howard
W. Odum and Chester D. Snell. Mr. Royster and
Mr. Leavitt are building beside the Durham road,
Mr. Odum and Mr. Snell out to the southwest toward
Pittsboro. Edwin Greenlaw is soon to start his house
on the lot between the MacNiders' and the Hender-
sons', on the way to Durham. Gustave M. Braune,
Frederick H. Koch, and A. C. Howell are to have
homes on what was the Tenney farm but is now to
be a residential colony. Paul John Weaver has al-
ready finished the foundations of his home on the edge
of the Park Place settlement.
Cameron MacRae announced the other day that a
three-story edifice would soon be erected on the corner
of Henderson street across from the post-ofSce. The
Tankersley building next to the post-office on the
west is almost finished. W. B. Sorrell is to build a
two-story store building west of the banks and drug
stores.
S. J. Brockwell is planning a new home on Hen-
derson street, a block below the post-office, and Col-
lier Cobb is to add a unit to Cobb Terrace for the
occupancy of H. R. Totten. D. D. Carroll and W. F.
Prouty are making ready to break up into lots their
land on the Pittsboro road; Mr. Prouty and perhaps
Mr. Carroll will themselves build there. Other pro-
fessors who, it is said, may build this summer are J.
F. Dashiell, J. E. Lear, and F. F. Bradshaw.
The Baptist church, on Columbia street near
I^'ranklin, is almost ready for its opening. The Epis-
copalians are assured of funds for their new church
next to the present Chapel of the Cross. The
Methodists are to launch this summer a campaign for
monej' for their new church, which is to stand where
the old Seaton Barbee house now is.
Dr. J. W. Turrentine, Ph.B. 1901, M.S. 1902,
chemist in the U. S. Department of Agriculture,
gave an illustrated lecture on Algae before the Bot-
anical Society of Pennsylvania at the University of
Pennsylvania, December 16, 1922.
218
TliE ALUMNI REVIEW
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
Member of Alumni Magazines Associated
Issuid monthly except in July August, and September, by the Gen-
eral Alumni Association of the University of North Carolina.
Board of Publication
The Review is edited by the following Board of Publication:
Louis R. Wilson, '99 Editoi
Associate Editors: Walter Murphy, '92; Harry Howell, '95; Archibald
Henderson, '98; W. S. Bernard, '00; J. K. Wilson, '05; Loun
Uraves, '02; F. P. Graham, '09; Kenneth Tanner, '11; Lenoir
ChiUiibers, '14; K. VV. Madry, '18.
E. R. Rankin, '13 Managing Editor
Subscription Price
Single Copies *9-20
Per Year 1°°
OFFICE OF PUBLICATION, CHAPEL HILL, N. C.
Entered at the Postoffice at Chapel Hill, N. C, as second class
matter.
THE UNIVERSITY IN PRINT
number, was reprinted in the August Ayyierican Law
Review, published in St. Louis, and Mr. W. F. Dodd's
article on Statute Law and the Law School, in the
June number, was reprinted in the November Ameri-
can Law School Review, published in St. Paul. In
addition, the editors have been gratified to see various
articles and editorial notes cited as authority for
positions taken by law writers in other law reviews.
The special features of the April number, which
will appear late in May, will be two articles by Pro-
fessors W. J. Matherly and Edmund Brown, Jr., both
of the School of Commerce of the University of North
Carolina, on Taxation of Shares of Stock in North
Carolina Corporations, and Cooperative Marketing in
North Carolina, respectively. The June number will
be devoted exclusively to a review of the public laws
enacted by the North Carolina General Assembly of
1923.
The January number of The North Carolina Law
Review, rendered three months late by unanticipated
editorial difficulties, made its appearance Wednesday,
April 11. The April issue will appear the first week
in May, and the June issue about commencement time.
The June number will be devoted to a review of the
public laws enacted by the General Assembly of 1923.
The leading article in the current number is a dis-
cussion of the economic and legal aspects of the con-
troversy between the state banks of North Carolina,
Georgia, Kentucky, and Oregon, and the Federal Ke-
serve System over The Par Clearance of Checks. It
is contributed by Professor C. T. Murchison, of the
School of Commerce of the University. Dean L. P.
McGehee, of the School of Law, has an article on an
important aspect of real property law. Estoppel and
Rebutter in North Carolina. Professor Lyman P.
Wilson, of the College of Law of Cornell University,
is the author of an article entitled Limitations on the
Attractive Nuisance Doctrine, in which an early deci-
sion of Judge H. G. Connor, then a member of the
Supreme Court of North Carolina, and a recent deci-
sion of Justice Holmes of the Supreme Court of the
United States, form the basis for what the author
regards as the solution of the problem. Professor M.
T. Van Hecke, the editor-in-charge of the Review,
contributes an article on Legislative Power in North
Carolina.
Communications received from North Carolina
judges and lawyers, and from law teachers in other
states, indicate that the January issue is generally
regarded as the best nvimber of the North Carolina
Law Review yet produced. Especially notable was
the recognition given to the leading article on Par
Clearance of Checks, by Professor C. T. Murchison,
wlien the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond pur-
chased thirteen hundred reprints of the article for
distribution among the banks of North and South
Carolina. This is the third time an outside agency
has caused an article appearing originally in the
North Carolina Law Revieio to be reprinted in full.
Dean L. P. McGehee 's discussion of Wife's Separate
Action for Personal Injury to Husband, in the June
Charles Phillips Russell, "04, known in American
journalistic circles as Phillips Russell, has been at
32 Marlborough Hill, Loudon, N. W. 8, where he has
been engaged in literary aud journalistic work.
In recent years Mr. Russell has been a frequent
contributor to American and European magazines,
some of his articles being as follows: Roads of
Doubt, and American Literature in France, in the
Freeman; The Best Epigrammist since Oscar Wilde,
in Shadowlandj The Troubadour, a short story in
Smart Set; The Chimney, a short story, in McClure's;
Journee de Negre, a translation in the Paris Human-
ite of a short story. Poems by Mr. RusseU have also
appeared in Smart Set, Loudon Fanfare, and Lon-
don New Age.
Two recent publications in the Bulletin series of
the University Extension Division are Town Studies,
by Harold D. Meyer, of the School of Public Welfare,
and The Enforcement of Railroad Labor Board De-
cisions, by E. Ralph Rankin, '13, Associate Director
of Extension. Town Studies,. as the title seemingly
implies, is arranged for study by members of the
State Federation of Women 's Clubs, the State League
of Women Voters, and the State Parent-Teacher
Associations. The second Bulletin is the handbook
of the High School Debating Union for 1923.
Common Forest Trees of North Carolina: How to-
Know Them, is the title of a 76-page booklet edited
by J. S. Holmes, '90, State Forester of North Caro-
lina and issued by the North Carolina Geological and
Economic Survey. The booklet describes the trees
ruost usually seen in North Carolina forests, is well
illustrated, and serves splendidly as an aid in the
identification of trees.
According to the University Catalogue, a 464-page
booklet which has recently come from the press, the
faculty of the University includes 57 full professors,
43 associate and assistant professors, 34 instructors,
20 teaching fellows, and 28 student assistants — a total
of 182 persons engaged in some way in giving in-
struction.
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
219
HIGH SCHOOL WEEK AT THE UNIVERSITY
Chapel Hill was the mecca on April 12 and 13 for
six hundred visitors from the high schools of North
Carolina. The visitors included debaters, athletes
and school officials who had come, many of them from
remote sections of the State, for the eleventh annual
final contest of the High School Debating; TTnion,
the eleventh annual inter-scholastic track meet, and
the eighth annual inter-scholastic tennis tournament.
All of these events made up what has become known
in late years as High School Week at the University.
Sixty high schools sent their debating teams num-
bering" 240 speakers to the University to compete in
the final contest of the High School Debating Union
for the Aycock ^Memorial Cup. These schools had
won both debates in the State-wide triangular debat-
ing contest held in 250 communities on March 30, on
the querj': Resolved, That Congress should provide
for the enforcement of decisions of the Railroad
Labor Board.
A first general meeting of the debate delegations
was held in Gerrard Hall at 2 :00 P. M. on Thursday,
April 12. Prof. N. W. Walker, chairman of the cen-
tral committee on the debate, presided over the meet-
ing. At this meeting the drawing for sections and
for pairs in the first preliminary was held. The first
preliminary in fourteen sections was held Thursday
evening. From each section one affirmative team and
one negative team were chosen for the second pre-
liminary.
The schools whose- teams made the second pre-
liminary on the affirmative side of the query were :
Guilford, Wilson, Alarshville, Glade Valley, Stone-
wall, Durham, Statesville. Southern Industrial In-
stitute, Mills River, Monroe, and St. Pauls.
The schools whose teams made the second prelimi-
nary on the negative side of the querj^ were : Beau-
fort, Farm School, Stovall. Durham, Elm City, Sun-
bury, Glen Alpine, Graham, Elizabeth City. Middle-
burg, Monroe, Guilfor<I, Williamston and Elon Col-
lege.
The Final Debate
To Misses Ellen I\Iellick and Mary Dozier, speakers
on the negative representing the Elizabeth City high
school, belongs the honor of winning for their school
the Aycock Memorial Cup. In the final debate with
Anderson Boswell and William Anderson, speakers
on the affirmative representing the Wilson high
school, the Elizabeth City young ladies won the award
by a three to two vote of the judges.
The final debate was held in Memorial Hall on
Friday evening, April 13. In spite of the rain which,
had fallen steadily during the day, a huge crowd was
present to hear the final debate. The debate itself
was spirited and ranked high among all the debates
which have yet been held for the Aycock Memorial
Cup.
President H. W. Chase presided over the final de-
bate. D. B. Teague, of Sanford, a member of the
class of 1910, presented the Aycock Memorial Cup
in the name of the former Carolina debaters, who had
donated the trophy. Prof. M. C. S. Noble presented
the cups and medals to the winners in the inter-
scholastic track meet. The judges of the final debate
were Professors H. II. Williams, L. P. McGehee. H.
M. Wagstaff, L. R. Wilson, and W. S. Bernard. A
reception in the Gymnasium immediately after the
debate brought to a conclusion the activities of High
School Week.
Schools Entering Finals
The following schools sent their representatives to
Chapel Hill to participate in the debate finals:
Almond. Angier. Apex, Arcadia, Beaufort, Bolton,
Brevard Institute, Bunn, Canton. C'arthage, Colum-
bus, Dover, Durham, Elizabeth City, Elm City, Elon
College, Falling Creek, Farm School. Glade Valley,
Glen Alpine, Granite Falls, Graham, Guilford, Har-
mony, Harrisburg, Henrietta, Hickory, Jonesboro,
Kinston, Lexington. Louisburg. Macclesfield, Marsh-
ville, ]\Iaxton, Mills River, Middleburg, iMineral
Springs, Monroe, Mountain Park, Mount Olive,
Moyock, Paw Creek, Pinnacle, Princeton, Roberdel,
Rock Ridge, Southern Industrial Institute, St. Pauls,
Saratoga, Stanley, Statesville, Stonewall, Stovall,
Sunbury, Taylorsville, Teacheys, Turkey Knob,
Wakelon, Wilke.sboro, Wilson, Williamston.
The Track Meet
The inter-scholastic track meet was conducted un-
der the general direction of Robert A. Fetzer, direc-
tor of athletics in the LTniversity, who had associated
with him as officials various others who are closely
identified with track athletics at the University. The
meet was the largest which has yet been held.
The Charlotte high school team won first place in the
track meet and was awarded the trophy cup. The
Greensboro relay team won the relay race and was
awarded a cup in this connection.
Twenty schools were represented in the meet and
the contestants numbered nearly two hundred. The
following schools were represented : Battleboro, Bur-
lington, Chapel Hill. Charlotte. Fayetteville, Friend-
ship, Greensboro, High Point, Laurinburg, Oxford.
Raleigh, Reidsville, Roanoke Rapids, Rockingham,
Stem, Wilson, Farmville, Durham, Apex and Tarboro.
The Tennis Tournament
The tennis tournament was conducted iinder the
direction of E. C. Jernigan and associated Carolina
tennis players. The tournament was the largest
which has yet been held. The Charlotte high school
players won the cup offered for the doubles champion-
ship, and the Goldsboro high school representative
won the cup offered for the singles championship.
The schools taking part in the tennis tournament
were : Benson, Burlington, Charlotte, Fayetteville,
Goldsboro, Greensboro, Hickory, Leaksville, Oak
Ridge, Oxford, Raleigh. Rockingham, Siler City,
Smithfield, Wilson, Winston-Salem, Lexington, Rocky
Mount, Sanford, and Atlantic Christian College
Preparatory Department.
MEETING OF LOCAL ASSOCIATION
OFFICERS
A meeting of the officers of all the local ahanni as-
sociations — 65 of them with about 140 officers — is
being planned at 7 P. M. on June 11 of commence-
ment. The occasion will be celebrated by a dinner
held at that time, and every local association is urged
to send all of its officers, and certainly the .secretary
if only one can attend. The main topic for considera-
tion will be The Relation of the Local Association
to the Central Office.
220
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
Union National
Bank
CHARLOTTE, N. C.
Capital $200,000.00
Surplus & Profits $252,000.00
Resources $3,000,000.00
We cordially invite the
alumni and friends of the
University of North Carolina
to avail themselves of the fa-
cilities and courtesies of this
bank.
D. P. TILLETT
Cashier
Southern Mill
Stocks
All recent reports show an
improvement in money condi-
tions and in returning demand
for cotton goods.
Just now is a good time to buy
SOUTHERN MILL STOCKS
We have several very good
offerings indeed at this time,
at prices which should show
good profits as the mill business
becomes adjusted again.
Send for special list.
F. C. Abbott & Co.
CHARLOTTE, N. C.
INVESTMENTS
Phone 238 Postal Phone
Long Ditt. 9957
Twenty-Three Years Experience
GENERAL ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
OF THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH
CAROLINA
OfScers of the Association
Walter Murphy, '92 President
D. L. Grant, '21 Secretary
WITH THE CLASSES
1889
—Dr. W. B. Kicks, a native of Nash
County, practiced law in Buena Vista,
Va., and Lexington, Va., for several
,\ears after he left the University. He
was a member of the firm of Batehelor,
Kicks and Winborne, all of the members
of which firm were Carolina alumni. In
1904 lie entered the Methodist ministry
and has since held various important
charges. In 1918 he was appointed mis-
sionary secretary of the missionary
centenary movement of the Methodist
church and has been ever since one of
the general secretaries in this movement.
He is also president of the conference
board of missions and president of the
board of trustees of the Cumberland
Mountain School. In 1916 the Kentucky
Weslayan College conferred upon him the
degree of D.D. He is married and has
two children.
1890
— G. P. Howell was graduated from West
Point in 1893 and at once became a sec-
ond lieutenant in the corps of engineers,
JJ. S. Army. He remained in that corps,
rising to the grade of colonel, until De-
cember 1, 1922, when he was retired
from active service. During his period
of army life Col. Howell was engaged iu
river and harbor work and fortifications
construction in Portland, Me., on the
Ohio and Mississippi rivers, in the Phil-
ippines, at Charleston, S. C, and at Gal-
veston, Texas. He was chief engineer of
the Philippines Division, of the South-
eastern Department, and of the Fourth
Corps Area. He was graduated from
the Army War College. In 1916 he com-
manded the First Engineers on the Mexi-
can border, and in the world war he com-
manded the 210th Engineers. Since his
retirement he has made his home in
Charleston, S. C, where he is chief en-
gineer of the port utilities commission of
that city.
— P. L. Woodard is at the head of the
mercantile firm of P. L. Woodard and
<-0., at Wilson.
1892
— J. W. Brooks, Law '92, a native of
Buncombe County, has been engaged in
the general practice of law at Walla
Walla, Wash., since 1893. He served
formerly as city attorney.
The Fidelity Bank
With Total Resources of Over
Six Million
Dollars
SoJicits Your Account
Four per cent, compound
interest on savings
No account too small to
receive our careful
attention
The Fidelity Bank
Durham, N. C.
T. C. Thompson
and Bros.
INCORPORATED 1895
General Contractors and
Builders
Birmingham, Ala.
Charlotte, N. C.
Now Building the
"Greater University"
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
221
Cha>. Lcc Smith, Pic«. HowcU L. Smith. Sec'y
Wm. Oliver Smith. Treas.
Edwards and Broughton
Printing Company
Raleigh, N. C.
Engraved Wedding Invitations. Christmas
Cards, Visiting Cards and Correspon-
dence' Stationery
Printers, Publishers and
Stationers
Steel and Copper Plate Engravers
Manufacturers of
Blank Books and Loose Leaf
Systems
a
onoress
J{all
y{otel
Washington, D. C.
Under the Dome of the
United States Capitol,
with the most beautiful
location in Washington,
extends a hearty welcome
to Carolina Alumni.
Rates under the European plan,
$2.50 and up. Rates under the
American plan, $5.50 and up
S. A. MANUEL,
President and General Manager
1893
— Wm. P. Hubbard, Law '93, has prar-
ticed law in San Francisco for the past
twenty years. His offices are in the Milts
Building. He is married and has one
ilaughter. He writes: "I retain as deep
an interest as ever in all that is happen-
ing in and around Chapel Hill. ' '
1894
— Dr. Thos. J. Wilson, Jr., registrar of
the University, was elected president of
the North Carolina College Registrars
.Vssooiation at the first meeting of this
iiody held in Greensboro in March.
1895
— E. W. Lehman has been engaged in
cotton manufacturing at Rosemary for a
number of years. He is secretary and
treasurer of the Rosemary Mfg. Co., tlie
largest manufacturers of cotton damasks
in the United States.
1895
— R. E. Coker, professor of zoology in
the University, has been appointed direc-
tor of the U. S. Fisheries Biological
Laboratory at Woods Hole, Mass., for
the coming summer season.
— A. H. Hammond is a member of the
firm of Hammond and Bell, jobbers and
converters of cotton cloths, Columbia, S.
C. Mr. Hammond attended the last re-
union of his class at commencement of
1921.
1898
— R. S. Busbee is secretary and treasurer
of the Atlantic Fire Insurance Co., Ral-
eigh. He has served as president of the
Rotary club of Raleigh and has been a
director of the local chamber of com-
merce for many years. He is married
and has two children, a boy and a girl.
His son, S. C. Busbee. was a student in
the University last yeai-. a member of the
class of 1925.
1899
H. M. Wagstaff. Secretary,
Chapel Hill, X. C.
— M. C, Elliott, lawyer of Washington,
f1. C, with offices in the Southern Build
ing, writes as follows in response to a
request for information concerning his
activities since he left Chapel Hill:
"After leaving the University in 1898
I spent two years in the law department
of the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Com-
pany and in 1900 entered the law school
of the University of Virginia. Leaving
tJiere in 1902 I spent a few months in
Richmond, Va., and then formed a law
partnership with the late Judge D.
Tucker Brooke, in Norfolk, Va. This
partnership continued until 1907 when I
came to Washington as counsel for the
The
Trust Department
Of the Southern Life and
Trust Company buys and
sells high grade stocks and
bonds. We have for sale
some especially attractive
preferred stocks.
Trust Department
Southern Life & Trust Company
A. W. McALISTER, President.
R. G. VAUGHN. First Vice-President.
A. M. SCALES, General Counsel and
Vice-President.
The Yarborough
RALEIGH'S LEADING
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HOTEL
MAKE IT YOUR HOME WHEN
IN RALEIGH
B. H. GRIFFIN HOTEL
COMPANY
222
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
THE BANK of
CHAPEL HILL
Oldest and Strongest Bank
in Orange County
Capital $25/300.00
Surplus $50,000.00
We earnestly solicit your banking
hiisiness, promising you every service
and nssist.ance consistent with safe
banking "It pleases ue to please
ynu."
M. C. S. NOBLE, President
R. L. STROWD. V.-President
M. E. HOGAN. Cashier
Smoke
PINEHURST
HAV-A-TAMPA
LA PALINA
CORTEZ
All Sizes
10c and Up
I. L. Sears Tobacco Co.
Phone 1323
Durham, N. C.
comptroller of the currency iu insolvent
national bank matters. I continued this
work for several months during tlie panic,
of in07 when I was appointed receiver
for a national bank in Philadelphia.
When this work was completed I prac-
ticed law in Philadelphia from 1909 un-
til 1911. Then I returned to Virginia
and engaged in general practice at Char-
lottesville, Va. In 1913 I was appointed
counsel to the comptroller of the cur-
rency; in .January, 1914, secretary and
counsel to the reserve bank org.anization
committee, which committee had charge
of the organization of federal reserve
banks. Upon the organization of the
Federal Reserve Board I was appointed
general counsel and continued in that
liosition until March 1, 1919, when I re-
turned to private practice, opening an
office here in Washington. Upon leaving
the Federal Reserve Board I was retained
as consulting counsel by the Board and
was also retained as consulting counsel
by the War Finance Corporation. I am
still engaged in private practice here in
Washington and am still serving as con-
sidting counsel for the War Finance
Corporation but have no other connection
with any governmental agency. ' '
1905
W. T. Shore, Secretary,
Charlotte, N. C.
—From 1905 until 1912 Paul W. Schenck
was connected as an official with a group
of fire insurance companies in Greens-
boro known as the Greensboro Fire In-
surance Companies. In .Janiiary, 1912,
he established his own insurance State
agency office, which has since been con-
ducted in the name of Paul W. Schenck,
State Agent. In this capacity he is
State agent for the Globe and Rutgers
Fire Insurance Co. of New York, the
Globe Underwriters of New York, and
the Provident Mutual Life Insurance
Co. of Philadelphia. He also owns and
m.inages the Carolina Insurance Agency
• 'o., a local insurance company in
Greeusborii. He is prominently identi-
fied with the civic life of Greensboro. He
ii;is served as president of the Greensboro
Country Club and has served for two
terms as president of tlie Rotary club of
Greensboro. At the conference of Rotary
clubs of the 38th district held in March
at Charleston, S. C, he was named gov-
enior of the district.
1906
J. A. Pakker, Secretary,
Washington, D. C.
— J. P. Stedman was recently elected an
assistant treasurer of the R. J. Reynolds
Tobacco Co., at Winston-Salem.
KODAK FINISHING
As Qood as the Best
Anywhere
Over eighty per cent of our busi-
ness is mail order
May We send you a price list?
R. W. FOISTER
BOX 242
CHAPEL HILL, N. C.
The Guilford Hotel
GREENSBORO, N. C.
Ijoeated in the heart of
Greensboro, and operated on
the European plan, modern
in every respect, the Guilford
Hotel extends a hearty invi-
tation to Carolina Alumni to
make it their headquarters
while in the city. You are
always welcome.
We have one of the best
and most talked about Cafe-
terias in North Carolina.
Our motto is excellent ser-
vice and our prices are rea-
sonable.
Guilford Hotel Company
M. W. Sterne, Manager
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
223
DRINK
Delicious and Refreshing
Quality tells the difference in
the taste between Coca Cola and
counterfeits.
Demand the genuine by full
name — nicknames encourage sub-
stitution.
Get a bottle of the genuine
from your grocer, fruit stand, or
cafe.
Durham Coca-Cola Bottling Co.
Durham, N. C.
Asphalt Roads
and Streets
Durable and Economical
If you are interested in streets or
roads we invite you to inspect our
work. See the Asphalt Highways built
by us recently: Rocky-Mount-Nash-
ville Highway, Raleigh-Cary Highway,
Durham toward Hillsboro. Durham
toward Roxboro, Greensboro to High
Point, Guilford County, Gibsonville
Road, Guilford County, Archdale Road,
Guilford County, Thomasville Road,
Guilford County, Guilford Station Road
and many others. This work speaks for
itself.
A representative will visit yuu and
supply any tnforniatiou or estimate!
desired.
Robert G. Lassiter & Co.
Engineering and Contracting
Home Office: Oxford, N. 0.
327 Arcade Building Norfolk, Va.
1002 Citizens Bank Building
Raleigh, N. C.
American Exchange National Bank
Building Greensboro, N. 0.
1910
J. R. Nixon, Secretary,
Edenton, N. C.
— T. P. Nash, Jr. is head of the depart-
ment of chemistry in the college of medi-
cine of tlie University of Tennessee, at
Memphis. In 1922 he received the Ph.D.
degree from Cornell University. On
March 1, 1919, he married Miss Edith
Lyle Peatross, of Vicksburg, Miss. They
have a son, T. P. Nash, 3rd. During the
world war Dr. Nash was in service with
the ordnance department, stationed at
Picatinny Arsenal, N. J. At Memphis
he has a staff of six full-time teachers
and is making investigations on the func-
tions of the kidney and the causes of
diabetes mellitus.
— Dr. Louis Belden is engaged in the
practice of surgery in Indianapolis, lud.,
with offices in the Hume-Mansur Build-
ing. Dr. Belden is a native of Wilming-
ton. In 1915 he received the M.D. de-
gree from Johns Hopkins University. In
service during the world war he served
overseas as a captain in the medical
corps, with the 4th Division.
— After serving as rector of Episcopal
churches at Roanoke Rapids, at Jerome,
Arizona, and Clarkdale, Arizona, Rev.
Henry Clark Smith has been now for two
years rector of St. Andrew's Church,
Nogales, Arizona. This church has ivit-
nessed a rapid growth in the two years
since Mr. Smith became its rector. It
is now planning to build a new church, a
new parish house, and a new rectory.
Mr. Smith is one of the charter members
of the Rotary club of Nogales and was
a delegate both to the last district con-
ference and the last International Con-
vention of that organization. He is the
active head of the Boy Scout organiza-
tion at Nogales.
— Dr. Frank Wrenn is a physician of
Anderson, S. C, with practice limited to
radiology. During the world war he saw
two years service in Prance with the
French and American armies. He held
the rank of captain in the medical corps
and was discharged a major. He is
married.
— The engagement of Miss Louise Man-
ning Badham and Mr. Richard DUlard
Dixon, both of Edenton, has been an-
nounced. The wedding will take place in
the late spring. Mr. DLxon is clerk of
superior court for Chowan County. Dur-
ing the world war he served overseas as
a captain in the 113th Field Artillery.
1911
I. C. MosER, Secretary,
Asheboro, N. C.
— 8. J. Royall began the practice of law
in Florence, S. C, in 1914 and has prac-
ticed his profession there continuously
c
^
i
f<
lit
M^^^
The Young Man
who prefers (and moat young men do)
styles that are a perfect blend of
novelty and refinement has long since
learned the special competency of this
clothes shop.
Pritchard-Bright & Co.
Durham, N. 0.
Rawls- Knight Co.
' 'Durham 's Style Store
We extend a special invita-
tion to our Chapel Hill friends
to visit our store and view
what's new in Fall and
Winter wearing apparel.
Fashion's very latest styles
in Coats, Suits, Dresses and
Smart Millinery.
Beautiful Silks and,, Woolen
Dresses in the most appealing
styles.
All the new weaves in cot-
ton and woolen goods, silks,
duvetyn, plush. Large line of
silk and cotton hosiery. The
home of Lady Ruth, Crown,
Modart and Binner Corsets.
Centemeri Kid Gloves and
Ashers Knit Goods.
Mail orders promptly filled.
Rawls-Knight Co.
Durham. N. C.
224
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
Fashion Park
Clothes
Manhattan Shirts
Stetson Hats
We always carry a large
stock for the young man
HINE-MITCHELL CO, Inc.
"The Style Shop"
WINSTON-SALEM, N. C.
Spring Clothing
The Store
For
\^ or red
s^lotnes
>y~lats ana
Sneed-Markham-
Taylor Co.
Durham, N. C.
siuee with the exception of two years spent
in military service. During tlie world war
he saw service overseas as a first lieu-
tenant in the 118th Infantry, 30th Di-
vision. Mr. Eoyall writes: "It is with a
great deal of pleasure that I read Thk
Alumni Review every month and note
the wonderful progress that is being
made at the University."
1913
A. L. M. Wiggins, Secretary,
Hartsville, S. C.
— T. M. Eamseur was in school work at
Salisbury and Wilmington for three
j'ears following his graduation from the
University. In 1915 he became connected
as cost acouutant with the Hopewell, Va.,
works of the DuPont Co. In 1919 he be-
came a member of the staff of Haskins
and Sells, certified public accountants,
Baltimore. In 1921 he became comp-
troller of the firm of J. Schoeneman,
Inc., manufacturers of men's summer
clothes, Baltimore, which position he
still holds. He is married and has a
daughter. His address is Calvert Court
Apts., Baltimore. He writes: "I am
looking forward to our ten-year reunion
in June and if nothing prevents, I will
be on hand. ' '
1914
Oscar Leach, Secretary,
Eaeford, N. C.
— Mr. and Mrs. F. R. Owen have an-
nounced the birth on February 2 of a
son, Frank Owen, Jr. Mr. and Mrs.
Owen now make their home at Gibson-
viUe, where Mr. Owen is secretary of a
knitting mill.
1915
D. L. Bell, Secretary,
Pittsboro, N. C.
— P. B. McCall, formerly principal of
the Charlotte high school, is now instruc-
tor in Latin in the University. He is
also a law student in the University. He
received license to practice law at the
examinations held last August.
1916
F. H. Deaton, Secretary,
StatesvUle, N. C.
— L. A. Blue, Jr. is engaged in the real
estate business with the firm of Oreou
E. and E. G. Scott at 800 Chestnut St.,
St. Louis, Mo. During the world war he
held the rank of first lieutenant of in-
fantry in the 81st Division, serving as
aide-de-camp to Brigadier General Geo.
W. Mclver, '73. He married Miss Mar-
gai-et Louise Scott at Riverside, N. Y.,
on July 31, 1918. They have a, daughter,
Joan, three years of age. Mr. Blue
Save Your
Money
Buy bonds and protect your
own and your family's future.
Bonds are safe and marketable
and can be obtained to yield up
to 7 per cent.
Consult your banker regarding
the bonds this company sells.
HENDERSON-WINDER
COMPANY
INVESTMENTS
Greensboro National Bank Bldg
Greensboro, N. C.
PENDY
Dean of Transportation
All History of the Bus be-
gins and ends with Pendy
He is the pioneer jitney man
and the one that brought the
$1.00 Fare to 50c
Alumni are invited to keep
this price down to 50 cents
by riding in
THE RED BUS
See and ride in the Red Bus
Pendy controls the price
SCHEDULE
Leave Chapel Hill Leave Durham
8:30 A.M. 10:00 A.M.
10:50 A.M 11:40 A.M.
2:15 A.M. 3:10 P.M.
4:00 P.M. 5:08 P.M.
7:00 P.M. 8:00 P.M.
9.00 P.M. 10:30 P.M.
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
225
ESTABLISHED 1916
illuintij Coyalty fund
"One for all, all for one"
Council:
A. M. SCALES, '92
LESLIE WEIL, '95
L. R. WILSON, '99
A. W. HAYWOOD, '04
W. T. SHORE, 'OS
J. A. GRAY, '08
To The Reunion Classes of 1 923
Do you want the L-outrilnitioiis which you will bring back to the Hill in
June to "count most for the enrichment of the life of the campus?
The one sure way, the way which ]895. and 1905, and 1909, and a half dozen
other classes have employed, is
THROUGH
The Alumni Loyalty Fund
Through this Fund you have the opportunity of making an investment that
will not only be permanent, but will increase with the years.
IT IS THE IDEAL WAY TO MAKE THE IDEAL GIFT.
PILL OUT COUPON, TEAR OFF, AND SEND TO
JULIUS A. WARREN, Treas.
Alumni Loyalty Fund,
Chapel Hill, N. C.
Enclosed find my Alumni Loyalty Fund contribution for 1923,
as follows:
CHECK HEBE
Name ..
Address
Date
Class _
PUT CAROLINA IN YOUR WILL.
$ 2.00
$ 5.00
$ 10.00
$ 15.00
$ 20.00
$ 25.00
$ 50.00
$100.00
226
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
Pollard Brothers
HARDWARE
Phone 132
120 W. Main St.
209-11 Parrish St.
Durham, N. C.
ODELL'S, INC
GREENSBORO, N. C.
China, Cut Glass and
Silverware
General line of Hardware,
Sporting Goods and
Household Goods
Dependable goods. Prompt
Service. Satisfactory
Prices
Perry-Horton Shoe Co.
Special Agents for Nettleton and
other Standard Makes for Men
and Women
Shoes and Hosiery
MAKE OUR STORE HEAD-
QUARTERS WHILE IN
DURHAM, N. C.
Snider-Fletcher
Company
Watclies, Diamonds and
Jewelry
110 W. Main St. Durham, N. C.
writes : ' ' We will be glad to receive calls
from North Carolina friends. ' '
— Baldwin Maxwell is assistant professor
of English in Rice Institute, Houston,
Texas.
1917
H. G. Baity, Secretary,
Raleigh, N. C.
— Dr. A. H. Elliott is assistant health
officer for New Hanover County, located
at Wilmington.
— H. 6. Baity is engaged in engineer-
ing work on the staff of the State Board
of Health, Raleigh.
— Boyden Nims was last year in the fac-
ulty of the John Marshall high school,
Richmond, Va. He is now a graduate
student at Harvard.
— Dr. H. M. Sweaney, of Durham, is
county physician for Durham County.
1918
W. R. Wdnsch, Secretary,
Monroe, La.
-lialph Rimmer is a chemist with the
American Aluminum Company, at Badin.
-Dr. A. L. O'Briant practices medicine
:\t Cameron.
— Dr. A. C. Ambler is engaged in the
general practice of medicine at Ashe-
ville..
— T. P. Harrison, Jr. is a graduate stu-
dent, specializing in English, in Cornell
University. His address is 111 Eddy
Street, Ithaca, N. Y.
— E. P. Duncan is superintendent of the
,\l:iyodan schools.
1919
H. G. West, Secretary,
Thomasville, N. C.
■ — P. 6. Miles is engaged in the practice
of law at Winston-Salem, with offices in
the Wachovia Bank Building. Mr. Miles
was editor-in-chief of The Tar Heel in
his senior year.
-Dr. Shahanc R. Taylor is at present
:in interne in the Fifth Ave. hospital,
New York City, preparing himself to
become an eye, ear, nose and throat
specialist. He is thinking very seriously
of locating in Greensboro sometime
during the next few months.
1920
T. S. KiTTRELL, Secretary,
Henderson, N. C.
— Nathan Mobley is assistant mauagev
iif the North Carolina branch of the
Pidclity and Deposit Co., with offices
ill the Commercial National Bank
Building, Charlotte.
— Delma Desmond Hocutt and Miss
Helen Smith Avere married on January
27 at Henderson. Mr. Hocutt is en-
g:iged in the drug business at Hen-
derson.
THE UNIVERSITY
CAFETERIA
By courteous and pleasing ser-
vice the University Cafeteria has
won its way into the hearts of a
great many students and alumni.
The same service that made the
Cafeteria popular last year is
being rendered again this year.
Come in and Try Our Meals
HUTCHINS DRUG STORE
Winston-Salem, N. C.
A drug store complete in all respects
located in the heart of Winston Salem
and operated by CAROLINA men,
where up-to-the-minute service is main-
tained, and where Alumni and their
friends are always especially welcome.
JAS. A. HUTCHINS, Manager
DILLON SUPPLY CO.
RALEIGH, N. C.
Mill Supplies
Machinery
Modern Machine Shop, Auto
Cylinder and Crankshaft
Grinding
HICKS-CRABTREE
COMPANY
THREE MODERN DRUG STORES
RALBIOH, NORTH CAROLINA
Eastman Kodaks and Supplies
Nuanally's Candies
The place to meet your friends when
in the Capital OiW
GILBERT CRABTREE, Mgr.
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
227
BUDD-PIPER ROOFING CO.
DURHAM. N. C.
CONTRACTORS
Johns-Manville Asbestos Roofing
and Shingles. Slate, Tin and Tile
Roofing.
A few of our jobs in Chapel Hill
are: Dormitories B, C, D and E
History and Language Buildings
Physics and Engineering Building
Universitj- Laundry ; Sprunt Me-
morial Church ; New Baptist
Church, etc.
CONTRACTS SOLICITED ANY-
WHERE IN STATE
Dermott Heating
Company
Durham, N.C.
HEATING SYSTEMS
Steam, Hot Water or Vapor
Durham Home Heating
Systems
Engineers and Contractors
Chapel Hill Hardware
Company
Cutlery, Paints, Oils, House-
hold Supplies, Tools
Phone 144
COOPER'S
MONUMENTS
Communicate with me re-
garding your needs for monu-
ments or tombstones. Will
gladly forward catalogue upon
request.
W. A. COOPER
RAEIGH. N. C.
BLUE RIBBON BRAND
ICE CREAM
SHERBETS
FANCY ICES
PUNCH
Durham Ice Cream
Co.
Durham, N. C.
BROADWAY CAFE
WE CORDIALLY INVITE YOU
TO VISIT OUR CAFE WHEN
YOU ARE IN GREENSBORO
Excellent Service
Courteous Treatment
GREENSBORO, N. C.
A Little Field Well Tilled
Never think that yotir i^rinting orders are too small for us to
handle, or to submit to our exp'ert craftsmen.
The small orders for printing, under our careful attention, will
by their elegant appearance and consistent quality, attract attention
to your business.
The smaller the business, the greater care is necessary to foster
and kce]) it growing. Good jirinting helps to emphasize superiority in
(|uality, and the other kind lea\es the opposite impres,sion.
Whether your printing runs into two figures or six, give it the
care that will get full value out of it. Make your printing your repre-
sentative.
Yours in the pa.st, present and future.
THESEEMAN PRINTERY
INCORPORATED
Printers in
Durham. North Carolina
Since 1885
228
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
WELCOME TO
STONEWALL HOTEL
F. DORSETT, Manager
CHARLOTTE, N. C.
Elubanks Dru^ Co.
Rmtiablm Druggista
CHAPEL HILL,. N. 0.
I5l)e Knlverslt? "press
Zeh p. Councii.. Mgr.
Printing
QUALITY AND SERVICE
CHAPEL HILL. N. 0.
Flowers for all Occasions
DURHAM FLORAL
NURSERY
Chapel Hill Agenls: EUBANKS DRUG COMPANY
Electric Shoe Shop
Expert Shoe Repairing
CHAPEL HILL, N. C.
W. B. SORRELL
Jeweler and Optometrist
CHAPEL HILL, N. C.
WHITE HOUSE CAFE
"Feeds You Better"
Headquarters for Carolina
Men
CHAPEL HILL, N. C.
PATTERSON BROS.
DRUGGISTS
Ageucy Norris Candy The Rexall Store
Chapel Hill. N. 0.
1921
O. W. Phillips. Secretary
Greensboro, N. C.
— J. C. Cowan, Jr., is engaged in the
textile business with the Tanner inter-
ests at Spindale.
— H. C. HefEner is in the faculty of the
University of Wyoming. He lives at
509 S. 8th St., Laramie.
1922
L. J. Phipps, Secretary,
Chapel Hill, N. C.
— F. A. Grissette is editor and publisher
of the Granite Falls News, at Granite
Falls.
Whiting-Horton Co.
Thirly-five Years Raleigh 't
Leading Clothiers
PRIDGEN & JONES COMPANY
We carry the best shoes, Edwin
Clapp. Howard and Foster, and Hey
wood's.
Expert fitters — A cordial welcome
awaits you. „ „ . -kt ^-i
107 W. Main St. Durham, N. C.
MARKHAM - ROGERS CO.
Clothes Tailored at Fashion
Park
DURHAM, N. C.
CHAS. C. HOOK,
ARCHilEli
CHARLOTTE. N. C.
Twenty years' experience in
planning school and college build-
int;s.
Gooch's Cafe
Offers to Alumni and Stu-
dents a Cafe and Service
second to none in the Siate.
Established in 1903.
Chapel Hill. N. C.
A. A. KLUTTZ CO., INC.
Chapel HiU, N. C.
Books, Stationery,
Groceries
DURHAM BUSINESS SCHOOL
Offers exceptional opportunities to those
desiring training in the fundamental
principles of business.
Write for catalogue and full partic-
ul.irs to
Mrs. Walter Lee Lednum, President
DURHAM, N. C.
The Peoples National Bank
WINSTON SALEM, N. O.
Capital $150,000 U. S. Depository
J \V. Pries. Pres. W. A. Blaib. V.P.
J. M. Dean. Cashier
TAYLoii Simpson. Assistant Cashier
R. BLACKNALL & SON
druggists
Norms and Huyler's Candies
0. Bernard. Manager
Corcoran Street Durham. N. C.
Campbell-Warner Co.
FINE MONUMENTS. BUILDING STONE
REASONABLE PRICES. WRITE US
Phono 1131
RALEIGH. N, 0.
HOTEL CLEGG
Greensboro, N. C.
OPPOSITE .STATION
Rooms $1.50 and Up
Cafe in Connection
CAROLINA MEN WELCOME
FALL GREETINGS
As the town grows, so do we, and we
invite Faculty. Students. Citizens, and
all others to give us a look before
making any Fall purchase.
ANDREW'S CASH STORE
The J. F. Pickard Store
A. C. PICKARD, Owntr
HEAVY AND FANCY
GROCERIES
Opposite CatnpuB
CHAPEL HILL, N. C.
(Tulture Scl)olar$l)lp Service Self-Support
THE
Mortb (Tarollna (ToUegefor^omen
GREENSBORO, N. C.
An A-1 Grade College Maintained by North Carolina for the Education of the Women of the
State
The institution includes the following div- (b) The Faculty of Mathematics and
isions : Sciences.
•> X rm, /-< II s T -u 1 A i J (c) The Faculty of the Social Sciences.
]st-The College of Liberal Arts and 2nd— The School of Education.
Sciences, which is composed of : 3rd— The School of Home Economics.
(a) The Faculty of Languages. 4th — The School of Music.
The equipment is modern in every respect, including furnished dormitories, library, labora-
tories, literary society halls, gymnasium, athletic grounds, Teacher Training School, music
rooms, etc.
The first semester begins in September, the second semester in February, and the summer
term in June.
For catalogue and other information, address
JULIUS I. FOUST, President, Greensboro, N. C.
THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA SUMMER SCHOOL
Thirty-Sixth Session June 1 8 - - September 7, 1 923
First Term— June 18-July 28
Second Term — July 27-September 7
Courses counting for credit toward the A.B. and A.M. degrees will be offered in the follow-
ing departments : English, History, Mathematics, Latin, French, German, Spanish, Physics,
Chemistry, Geology, Geography, General Economies, Rural Economies, Sociology, Psychology,
and Education.
In the Department of Education coui'ses will he offered in the following branches : Educa-
tional Psychology, School Administration, Supervision, General High School Methods, History
of Education, Rural Education, Principles of Secondary Education, Tests and Measurements,
Special High School Methods in English, ni.stoi\\-. Mathematics, Latin, French, German, Ge-
ography, and General Science.
High Class Recreational Features and Entertainments of an educational character. Lec-
tures by noted Thinkers and Writers. Music Festival and Dramatic Performances.
A strong faculty has been secured composed of specialists in their respective departments
and successful teachers and superintendents chosen because of their recognized ability in their
respective fields.
Moderate Expenses — Rooms may be reserved at any time.
Preliminary Announcement ready for distribution now. Complete Announcement readv
April 10th.
For further information, address
N. W. WALKER, Dire^or, Chapel Hill, N. C.
THE
0. Henry
GREENSBORO, N. C.
COMPLIMENTS OF
THE WM. FOOR HOTELS CO.
Wm. Foor, President
E. E. Robinson, Viee-President-Treasurer
J. G. Rovitson, Secretary
W. H. Lowry, Manager
DIRECTORS
A. M. Scales
Clem G. Wright
^
THE O. HENRY
Greensboro, N, 0.
THE CLEVELAND
Spartanburg. S. C.
THE SHERATON
High Point, N. C.
THE ARAGON
Jacksonville, Pla.
New Hotels Now Building in
Charleston, S. C.
Charlotte, N. C.
The Carolina
Cafeteria
Oper.s on May 1 5
We have tried to make the
Carolina Cafeteria the last
word in modern cafeteria con-
struction and e(|uipment.
We beHeve that you will
find our service highly satis-
factory and we cordially invite
you to give us a trial.
We are located next door to
the Post Ofifice.
c
fl
^
The Carolina
Cafeteria
Chapel Hill. N. C.
Quincy Sharpe Mills, North Carolinian
After rising from obscurity to high success in ten years, this bril-
Hant young editorial writer of The Evening Sun, of New York, was
killed in an attack on the German lines in July of 1918.
Now a rarely appealing memoir of him has been brought out by
Putnam's. It tells of Mills' boyhood, his college days in Chapel Hill,
his struggles in New York, and finally his experiences in the Army.
The volume contains letters that give an unusually vivid picture of the
war.
. No North Carolinian — especially no alumnus of the University,
which Mills loved so deeply — should be without this book.
Putnam 5
2 W. 45th
Street
New York
Price $4.50
On This Come
More Than Thircj
i I
CAPITAL, SURPLUS AND PROFITS, $1,100,000
RESOURCES OVER $6,000,000
The First National
Bank
OF DURHAM
A large, up-to-date banking institu-
tion privileged to be of State-wide
service, always at the disposal of the
University of North Carolina, its
faculty, student body and alumni in
the transaction of their banking
matters.
JULIAN S. CARR, President
W. J. HOLLOWAY, V.-President
CLAIBORN M. CARR V.-President
SOUTHGATE JONES, Cashier
W. J. BROGDEN, Attorney
■';-,j>t.: .
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